Yeagersmash: This vendor used to be about making old games available and playable for the masses. Now, they are just another game-store. This will ultimately hurt GOG because Steam will crush them if they are trying to compete in the regular market. They should have stuck with their niche.
Ancient-Red-Dragon: So by "sticking with their niche," you mean GOG should only sell DOS-based or Windows 98-based type games and nothing else? Had they done that, then we wouldn't even be having this discussion today, because GOG would have already permanently gone out of business several years ago.
There's only a very limited pool of games that that fit the criteria you are talking about, and GOG has acquired as many of them as they are able to. They can't keep selling those same games, and nothing else, forever, or else they'd literally have no further income after their customers who wanted those games had bought them once.
GOG's best & most important niche has always been DRM-free games, and it's still doing that.
They should focus on making old games play on modern operating systems. That should be their primary focus. You really think they can compete with Steam in the mainstream game market? Seriously? ROFL... Their niche was always bringing old games to the modern forefront. Not sure what you are talking about, because when I first came to GOG, it was all old games, with a handful of modern titles.
Maxvorstadt: OSX? Ah, it`s a Mac thing. I guess, this is the answer. Not many people have a mac and less of them use it for playing games.
Bullshit. Do not turn my post into a Mac versus Windows thing. Many people have Macs and many people play games on them. You live in Germany and in Europe Macs are much more popular, so you of all people should know better. I know at least a dozen people in my small circle that own modern Macs and they play games fantastically. So, no - this is not the answer.
ignisferroque: Classic Mac OS isn't the same as OSX though and all classic Mac programs were written for a very different CPU architecture. They used a compatibility layer for a while, essentially dual booting Classic Mac OS next to OSX (and later used Rosetta for PowerPC to Intel conversions), but in general old Mac OS applications up to OS 9 don't work at all on OSX. To get these running its actually easier to use the DOS and Windows versions instead (and I guess this is were licensing issues can come up as well).
Once again, GOG is in the business of getting old shit to run on modern systems. I don't really care about the details. They should be impressing us with their wizardry. If I could do it myself, I would have no reason to come to this site at all. None, what-so-ever.